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Question about using an equalizer with crossovers
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<blockquote data-quote="wew lad" data-source="post: 8610168" data-attributes="member: 665412"><p>think of it like each speaker requires a channel, that's because each speaker gets its own signal from the DSP and thus requires its own channel (dont want your tweeter having the same HPF at 100hz as the mid, it needs to be like 2khz). The dsp controls the crossover frequency, as well as the time alignment of the driver (worry about dealing with TA later). DSP's produce better sound because among other reasons they are very accurate to the extent that you can set an exact crossover point, exact time alignment, and you can modify the EQ to "fix" inconsistencies and negative aspects in a speaker..beaming, resonances, peaks, lows in response, etc</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="wew lad, post: 8610168, member: 665412"] think of it like each speaker requires a channel, that's because each speaker gets its own signal from the DSP and thus requires its own channel (dont want your tweeter having the same HPF at 100hz as the mid, it needs to be like 2khz). The dsp controls the crossover frequency, as well as the time alignment of the driver (worry about dealing with TA later). DSP's produce better sound because among other reasons they are very accurate to the extent that you can set an exact crossover point, exact time alignment, and you can modify the EQ to "fix" inconsistencies and negative aspects in a speaker..beaming, resonances, peaks, lows in response, etc [/QUOTE]
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Question about using an equalizer with crossovers
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